her, suddenly courtly. He gestured to the chairs around a table in the middle of the sitting room, and we all sat down. From where I sat I could see the yard behind the house, sloping gradually to the edge of a wood, and the fruit trees, some of them already forming small green fruits. The windows were open, and that same hum of bees and rustle of leaves came to us. I thought how pleasant it must be for Stoichev, even in exile, to sit up here among his manuscripts and read or write and listen to that sound, which no heavy-handed state could muffle, or which no bureaucrat had yet chosen to send him away from. It was a fortunate imprisonment, as such things went, and perhaps more voluntary than we had any way of ascertaining. "Stoichev said nothing else for a while, although he looked intently at us, and I wondered what he thought of our appearing there, and whether he planned to find out who we were. After a few minutes, thinking he might never address us, I spoke to him. 'Professor Stoichev,' I said, 'please forgive this invasion of your solitude. We are very grateful to you and to your niece for letting us visit you.'
"He looked at his hands on the table - they were fine and freckled with age spots - and then at me. His eyes, as I've said, were hugely dark, and they were the eyes of a young man, although his clean-shaven olive face was old. His ears were unusually large and stuck out from the sides of his head in the midst of neatly clipped white hair; they actually caught some of the light from the windows, so that they looked translucent, pinkish around the edges like a rabbit's. Those eyes, with their combined mildness and wariness, had something of the animal in them, too. His teeth were yellow and crooked, and one of them, in the front, was covered in gold. But they were all there, and his face was startling when he smiled, as if a wild animal had suddenly formed a human expression. It was a wonderful face, a face that in its youth must have had an unusual radiance, a great visible enthusiasm - it must have been an irresistible face.
"Stoichev smiled now, with such force that it made Helen and me smile, too. Irina dimpled at us. She had settled herself in a chair under an icon of someone - I assumed it was Saint George - putting his spear with vigor through an undernourished dragon. 'I am very glad that you have come to see me,' Stoichev said. 'We don't get so many visitors, and visitors who speak English are even more rare. I am very glad to be able to practice my English with you, although it is not as good as it was, I am afraid.'
"'Your English is excellent,' I said. 'Where did you learn it, if you don't mind my asking?'
"'Oh, I do not mind,' said Professor Stoichev. 'I had the good fortune to study abroad when I was young, and some of my studies were conducted in London. Is there anything with which I can help you, or did you only wish to visit my library?' He said this so simply that it took me by surprise.
"'Both,' I said. 'We wished to visit it, and we wished to ask you some questions for our research.' I paused to hunt for words. 'Miss Rossi and I are very much interested in the history of your country in the Middle Ages, although I know far less about it than I ought to, and we have been writing some - ah - ' I began to falter, because it swept over me that despite Helen's brief lecture on the plane I actually knew nothing about Bulgarian history, or so little that it could only sound absurd to this erudite man who was the guardian of his country's past; and also because what we had to discuss was highly personal, terribly improbable, and not at all something that I wanted to broach with Ranov sneering down at the table.
"'So you are interested in the medieval Bulgaria?' said Stoichev, and it seemed to me that he, too, glanced in Ranov's direction.
"'Yes,' said Helen, coming quickly to my rescue. 'We are interested in the monastic life of medieval Bulgaria, and we have been researching it as well as we can for some articles we would